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Boyle-Finn-Turok CPT Universe

2018 · Latham Boyle, Kieran Finn, Neil Turok
Frontier

The Big Bang is a mirror, not a beginning. On the other side is an antimatter universe running backwards in time, and together with ours it forms a CPT-symmetric whole.

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In one sentence

The Big Bang is a mirror point connecting our universe to an antimatter universe running backwards in time.

The claim

The CPT-symmetric universe proposes that the Big Bang is not a one-sided beginning but a perfectly symmetric mirror. On one side is our universe, expanding forward in time with mostly matter. On the other side is a universe made of antimatter, expanding in the opposite time direction. If you flip charges, mirror-reflect space, and reverse time, the whole two-sided structure looks the same.

This symmetry allows Boyle, Finn, and Turok to build a cosmology without inflation. The universe emerges directly into a hot, radiation-dominated state, with the CPT symmetry itself selecting a unique simple quantum state. The same setup naturally produces a candidate for dark matter, a heavy right-handed neutrino, and explains the matter-antimatter imbalance as a property of the pair rather than each universe alone.

The family stance

The Big Bang is a mirror point between our universe and a matching antimatter universe running backwards in time. The two halves together form a CPT-symmetric whole, removing the need for cosmic inflation and explaining the matter-antimatter imbalance as a property of the pair rather than each universe alone.

Predictions

  • Of the three known light neutrinos, the lightest is exactly massless, testable through neutrinoless double-beta decay searches.
  • Dark matter consists of a single stable right-handed neutrino with a mass around 480 million GeV.
  • No inflation-like background of primordial gravitational waves at long wavelengths, testable by CMB B-mode experiments.
  • The universe passes directly from the Big Bang into a radiation-dominated era, with no inflationary phase.

Evidence

  • Current CMB data (Planck) and large-scale structure are compatible with the predicted radiation-dominated early universe and do not require inflation.
  • The model uses only the Standard Model plus right-handed neutrinos, producing the observed dark matter density without arbitrary new particles.
  • Experiments have not yet detected primordial long-wavelength gravitational waves, consistent with the model's prediction of none.
  • Neutrino oscillation data leave room for one light neutrino to be massless or extremely light.

Counterpoints

  • Most cosmologists see inflation as strongly supported by the observed flatness, large-scale correlations, and near scale-invariant fluctuations of the CMB.
  • Not seeing primordial gravitational waves yet does not strongly favor CPT symmetry, since many low-scale inflation models predict an undetectably small signal too.
  • The model's specific neutrino predictions are bold but unconfirmed; if a massless lightest neutrino is ruled out, the model is in trouble.
  • Some cosmological features, especially small-scale structure, are more naturally handled in standard inflationary ΛCDM.
  • The framework is relatively new and independent groups have only begun to test extensions, including how perturbations evolve and reheating works.
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Go deeperTechnical detail with proper terminology

The model imposes global CPT symmetry as a boundary condition at the Big Bang singularity. The full spacetime is constructed so the pre-Bang region is the CPT image of the post-Bang region. Quantum fields are placed in the unique CPT-invariant vacuum on this background, which fixes the arrow of time and selects the initial state simultaneously.

Within the Standard Model extended by three right-handed neutrinos and a discrete Z₂ symmetry, one right-handed neutrino becomes stable. Its relic abundance is computed from first principles, and matching observed dark matter density singles out a mass around 4.8 × 10⁸ GeV. The other two right-handed neutrinos participate in the seesaw mechanism that gives light neutrinos their masses.

CPT symmetry changes the picture of baryogenesis. Instead of adding CP-violating processes on one side, the matter-antimatter asymmetry is shared across the universe-antiuniverse pair. Total baryon number across both halves vanishes, even though each half separately shows an excess.

The prediction of no primordial gravitational waves at long wavelengths arises because, in the CPT-symmetric vacuum on a radiation-dominated background, certain tensor modes are absent or suppressed. Detecting a significant tensor-to-scalar ratio at CMB scales would strongly disfavor the model.

References

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